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Covid-19 Diligence Briefing

Our briefing for Tuesday June 9, 2020:

  • In the United States, at least 28 of the 50 states are not following the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) guidelines on reporting new COVID-19 cases, according to a CNN report. Half of those 28 states saw their cases increase in the last week. CDC says states should be reporting probable cases that show evidence of an infection without the confirmation of a lab test and cases where coronavirus was listed as a cause or contributing cause of death, but are not confirmed with a lab test. America’s four largest states by population – California, New York, Texas and Florida are among those listed as not reporting probable cases.

  • The Canadian federal government is proposing legislation that would impose fines and possible jail time for those deliberately lying on the country’s emergency response benefits applications. The Liberal minority government is facing fire from opposition governments who want completely different things. The Conservatives want to weed out the fraudulent claims and get people back to work, while the left of center NDP want to extend emergency aid and avoid going after those who make ineligible claims.

  • In the United Kingdom, retail outlets can reopen starting June 15th as long as they comply with government secure guidelines the government’s Business Secretary said on Tuesday. Restaurants, pubs, as well as hairdressers, barbers, nail bars and related services will remain closed until July 4th at the earliest. Prime Minister Boris Johnson didn’t approve of protestors “flouting social distancing” over the weekend. Around 200 anti-racism protests took place over the weekend in the country, and while most did remain peaceful, it was the 35 police officers injured, and the tearing down of statue to slaver Edward Colston in Bristol that Johnson thought might undermine the movement, “in the eyes of many who might otherwise be sympathetic”.

  • France’s government has announced a €15 billion rescue plan for its aerospace industry after it took a beating from the coronavirus pandemic. The plan hopes to save hundreds of thousands of jobs while keeping plane maker Airbus and airline Air France globally competitive. In exchange for the aid, the French government wants the industry to invest more in electric, hydrogen, or lower-emission aircraft as the country looks to make their aviation industry the “cleanest in the world.”

  • Brazil’s government continues to face backlash over the handling of the coronavirus pandemic. The latest in a string of controversies happened over the weekend when government officials stopped publishing cumulative totals on the Health Ministry’s website after Brazil passed Italy for third in most COVID-19 related deaths. After a public outcry and backlash over the decision, a top Health Ministry official told reporters that the body would restore the cumulative death toll to its website later this week.

  • The Chinese government has angrily rejected findings by scientists at Harvard University that claim the coronavirus started circulating in the city of Wuhan at the end of last summer. If Harvard’s claim is indeed true, this would be months earlier than the Chinese authorities have admitted. The researchers came to their conclusion after analysing satellite images of hospital car parks in Wuhan, ground zero of the coronavirus outbreak, and internet search queries about disease symptoms such as a cough.

  • The World Health Organization (WHO) is walking a back a statement that claims it is “very rare” for asymptomatic sufferers of COVID-19 to transmit the virus. The statement came on Monday from Dr. Maria Van Kerhove during a news briefing. On Tuesday, Dr. Van Kerhove changed her tune stating that the organization needs to better understand the spread of asymptomatic cases. The WHO’s current evidence suggests between 6 and 41 per cent of the population could have COVID-19 and not show any symptoms, a very wide gap to make any concrete declarations.

Covid-19 – Due Diligence And Asset Management

Quarantine’s a Price Worth Paying to get on a Mega Deal, Bankers Say

Brief: Investment bankers would be willing to plunge into self isolation for two weeks under new UK quarantine rules for travel, if it meant securing a lucrative role on a big deal. With M&A bankers itching to get back on the road as deal volumes remain in the deep freeze during the coronavirus pandemic, some senior dealmakers admit privately that a two-week quarantine period would be a price worth paying to be in the mix for a large transaction, according to conversations with three senior bankers. “If there was even a 5% greater chance that we would get the deal, we’d get on a plane and take the two weeks in a hotel or at home,” said one senior M&A banker in London. “Maybe we could just travel every two weeks,” joked another senior dealmaker. The UK government imposed a 14-day self-isolating period on 8 June for any travellers or returning Britons entering the country on planes, trains or ferries — even as the country begins to unwind lockdown restrictions that have kept the majority of the population at home since March.“We would just travel and then figure out the painful logistics of working from home or a hotel room, or whatever they ask us to do,” said another senior banker.

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Exclusive: Savings Surge Forces Goldman to Shut Marcus to New UK Clients

Brief: Goldman Sachs (GS.N) is closing its easy access savings business to new customers in Britain from Wednesday after deposits surged near to regulatory limits during the coronavirus lockdown.The British arm of digital brand Marcus, which pays market-leading rates to savers starved of meaningful cash returns, has attracted about 21 billion pounds ($27 billion) from more than 500,000 savers since its launch in 2018. However, British banking rules demanding ring-fencing of retail deposits totalling more than 25 billion pounds have prompted its executives to take steps to manage its growth. “We’ve really seen our growth accelerate under lockdown as people hold off on discretionary spending and take time to reorganise their finances and get the best deal for their money,” Des McDaid, head of Marcus UK, told Reuters. Ring-fencing would require Marcus in Britain to become a separate legal entity with its own board and limit how much capital it could share with the rest of Goldman’s businesses.

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Exclusive: Banks to Berlin – Loosen Coronavirus Cash Rules for Firms

Brief: Germany’s bank lobby is set to urge the government to drop some of the conditions attached to a trillion euro rescue scheme, arguing that companies are so reluctant to take the help that it threatens any recovery from the coronavirus outbreak. Martin Zielke, the head of the lobby and Commerzbank, will appeal this week to limit conditions - like pay caps and board seats - for government cash injections into companies, three people with knowledge of the matter said. Zielke argues that companies are taking on further debt, the chief means of government support, as prospects for revenue dim, and Berlin should offer capital injections with fewer strings, according to a paper outlining his position seen by Reuters. Companies will not otherwise accept help, the three people said, citing Zielke, whose Commerzbank caters to the Mittlestand companies that form the backbone of the German economy and was bailed out during the last financial crisis. The state still holds a 15% stake in Commerzbank and occupies two board seats.

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Shop Til you Drop: Mall Giant GPT Takes $500m COVID Hit

Brief: Diversified property giant GPT Group has become one of the first real estate investment trusts to reveal the impact of the coronavirus with a near $500 million write-down in the value of its shopping centre portfolio. Retail landlords have been hard hit by the COVID-19 pandemic as shoppers were forced to stay home under the lockdown laws, causing foot traffic and revenue to plummet. GPT, which owns 12 malls across the country, has written down the value of seven centres in which it has part or full ownership by $476.7 million after undertaking an independent assessment of its retail assets covering the months between December 31, 2019 to May 31. It is an 8.8 per cent decline since December. The group has also withdrawn its full-year 2020 guidance and is amending its dividend payout ratio policy. Chief executive Bob Johnston said the revaluations reflect the effects COVID-19 and the subsequent social restrictions have had on the retail assets. "This has generally been reflected in lower market rental growth rates, increased vacancy and abatement allowances and some softening in investment metrics," Mr. Johnston said.

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Advent Countersues Forescout, Asking Out of $1.9 Billion Deal

Brief: Advent International Corp. countersued Forescout Technologies Inc. in Delaware Monday, six weeks before a YouTube trial over the breakdown of their $1.9 billion take-private buyout, saying the deal’s collapse can’t be blamed on the coronavirus alone.“Because Forescout’s precarious finances would leave it insolvent upon closing of the proposed transactions, buyers cannot in good faith certify the solvency of the post-closing entity—which is a condition to close the $400 million term loan financing,” the Chancery Court filing says.Forescout’slawsuit against Advent, filed about two weeks ago, is part of awave of suitsasking courts to keep mergers on track as acquirers balking at the coronavirusscramble deals worldwide. Most of those disputes are being heard in the Chancery Court…According to Forescout’s complaint, an Advent representative told its CEO as they sought to renegotiate the transaction that “the Covid-19 outbreak caused a change of heart.”

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Private Equity Managers Eyeing Distressed Funds, Private Debt

Brief: Nearly all private equity managers expect to see a surge in distressed fund deals over the coming year, according to a new survey.The poll, commissioned by fund service firm Intertrust Group, found that 92 percent of private equity professionals across North America, Europe, and Asia believe distressed fund activity will increase in the wake of the coronavirus pandemic, which devastated businesses in the U.S. and elsewhere. Likewise, private equity managers viewed distressed funds as the biggest fundraising opportunity in the near future, with 83 percent indicating there would be more investor demand for strategies targeting distressed assets.This sentiment is already being borne out at major private equity firms. Last month, Apollo Global and KKR & Co. said they raised $1.75 billion and$4 billion, respectively, for credit funds focused on “dislocation” resulting from the Covid-19 crisis. Both funds were raised in just 8 weeks. Some respondents to the Intertrust survey also saw existing private equity funds shifting assets to target distressed opportunities. According to the report, 41 percent believed managers would reallocate unfunded commitments to “new distressed or non-traditional strategies.”

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Contact Castle Hall to discuss due diligence

Castle Hall has a range of due diligence solutions to support asset owners and managers as our industry collectively faces unheralded challenges. This is not a time for "gotcha" due diligence - rather this is a time where investors and asset managers can and should work together to share best practices and protect assets. Please contact us if you'd like to discuss any aspect of how Covid-19 may impact your business.

Our briefing for Monday June 8, 2020:

  • One hundred days after their first case of coronavirus was recorded, New York City was allowed to reopen some of its doors for business on Monday. New York City was the epicenter of the coronavirus pandemic in the United States, experiencing 21,000 related deaths due to COVID-19. America’s most populous city though is only entering their first phase of reopening, which means construction and manufacturing businesses are prioritized to resume activities. Retailers will be limited to curb-side pick-up for pre-arranged orders with few exceptions and many offices will remained closed for the time being. State governor Andrew Cuomo declared the city will carry out 35,000 tests a day to start and have opened 15 testing sites. These locations will prioritize testing for those who participated in the massive anti-racism protests over the last two weeks due to the death of George Floyd.

  • Canada’s most populous province announced details of their phase two reopening plan. Ontario Premier Doug Ford said during a news briefing on Monday that 24 of the 34 public health unit regions in the province will be allowed to enter phase two as of June 12th. The remaining 10 areas, which include the Greater Toronto area and others close to the southwestern tip of the province near the Canada/US border will need to wait until daily case numbers decrease more consistently. A social gathering increase, places of worship at a 30 per cent capacity limit and restaurants and bars reopening for outdoor dining on patios are some of the additions to the province’s phase two reopening.

  • Elsewhere in Canada, as of midnight tonight, the country will begin to allow immediate family members separated by temporary COVID-19 travel restrictions to enter the country. Those entering must not be showing any signs or symptoms of COVID-19, need to stay in the country for at least 15 days upon arriving, and self-quarantine for 14 days as well upon entering Canada.

  • United Kingdom health secretary Matt Hancock said the coronavirus is in retreat across the country. Hancock pointed to the government’s scientific advisers estimating the reproductive rate currently below one in all regions. There were no COVID-19 related deaths in London Hospitals on Sunday and the death toll was the lowest since the lockdown began on March 23rd. As of today, travellers entering the country also have to self-isolate for 14 days under the government’s new quarantine rules.

  • India is forging ahead with its reopening plan even as the country experiences 10,000 new cases of the coronavirus per day. The country’s restaurants and religious sites were allowed to reopen their doors on Monday as the country now has the 5th most cases in the world with more than 257,500 confirmed cases, passing previous European hotspots Spain and Italy. India is also thought to be underestimating their death toll from COVID-19 as they don’t count the people who die at home, or shortly after arrival at the hospital as they are frequently not tested.

  • A ban of anti-racism protests enforced by the New South Wales supreme court was overturned in the 11th hour and went ahead with a few tense moments, but no major incidents according to most media reports in Australia over the weekend. However, the protests did not sit well with some in the Australian government, including Finance Minister Mathias Cormann calling those who attended the demonstrations as reckless and self-indulgent. The head of Australia’s Medical Association stated those who attended the Black Lives Matter protests should self-isolate for 14 days to be absolutely safe and limit any potential new coronavirus outbreaks.

  • New Zealand announced on Monday that the last known person with coronavirus has recovered as the country appears to have eradicated the disease, at least for the time being. With no new cases in the last 17 days, New Zealand will be one of the first countries that could look as close to what people remember as normal in a long-time. Public events, retail and hospitality are back without limitations across the country of five million people. 

Covid-19 – Due Diligence And Asset Management

They’re ‘Free Markets’ Guys – and They Want the Government to Intervene

Brief: When making his case for the government to rescue the oil industry, Wil VanLoh wanted Texas regulators to know that at heart he was a free-markets kind of guy. “I am a free-market person through and through,” the founder of private-equity firm Quantum Energy Partners told the Railroad Commission of Texas — the regulatory body that oversees the state’s oil and gas industry — at a mid-April meeting. Yet VanLoh was pleading with the commissioners to temporarily limit oil production, warning their inaction would lead to widespread failure of small and midsize oil companies. The reduced supply, he hoped, would raise the value of the oil taken from the ground if done in coordination with other U.S. states. “We don’t live in a world of free markets,” he lamented, pointing to the massive government intervention during the 2008 financial crisis. “The system of capitalism the world now works under is one where the markets are generally left alone, except during extraordinary times of volatility,” VanLoh said during the April 14 meeting, held online due to the coronavirus pandemic. “And that, commissioners, is exactly what we’re experiencing right now in the oil and gas industry — and why you must intervene.”

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Private Equity Could Help British Businesses Stuck with £36bn in Toxic Debt – Report

Brief: Lobby group TheCityUK has warned that up to £36bn in government-backed loans could turn toxic by next year, as companies impacted by the Covid-19 pandemic struggle to pay back the debt.The Recapitalisation Group, a taskforce led by TheCityUK and accountancy firm EY,  found that companies would be left with approximately £100bn of unsustainable loans by the end of March 2021 in aninterim updatepublished on 8 June. Of this, nearly a third has been provided by the government's coronavirus business interruption schemes.The report suggested that the government could encourage buyout firms, insurers and pension funds to provide longer-term capital to struggling businesses in order to help them pay off the debt they took on to survive past the coronavirus crisis.The private equity industry in the UK, which has more than £150bn of dry powder, “could support equity financing to address the UK SME recapitalisation challenge”, the taskforce said.

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Stanley Druckenmiller Says He’s Been ‘Humbled’ by Market Comeback, Underestimated the Fed

Brief: Longtime hedge fund manager Stanley Druckenmiller told CNBC on Monday the market’s strong performance over the last three weeks has “humbled” him and that he underestimated the power of the Federal Reserve.“I had long-term concerns for the last few years that because of easy money, too much debt was being built up in the corporate sector,” Druckenmiller said on “Squawk Box.” “When Covid hit, I was pretty much of the view that there was a good chance that the credit bubble had finally burst and the unwinding of that leverage would take years.”That concern prevented the investor from capitalizing on the market’s robust rebound since the March 23 low: Druckenmiller said he has returned just 3% during the market’s 40% rally since the S&P 500′s springtime bottom.“Well I’ve been humbled many times in my career, and I’m sure I’ll be many times in the future. And the last three weeks certainly fits that category,” he said.

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Sustainable Investing is Set to Surge in the Wake of the Coronavirus Pandemic

Brief: The coronavirus pandemic has altered society in immeasurable ways, including, of course, investing. Stocks that benefited from people staying home, such as Netflix and Zoom Video, outperformed expectations in the past few months, while retailers and airline companies, among others, saw their stocks fall off a cliff. And now some of those worst-performing stocks of March and April are staging a comeback, as economies begin to reopen. But there could be a more long-lasting effect on Wall Street: Covid-19 may well prove to be a major turning point for ESG investing as the pandemic alters society’s values. This investing approach, which evaluates a company’s environmental, social and governance ratings alongside traditional financial metrics, was already coming off a banner year, and its reach continues to expand. So far this year, U.S.-listed sustainable funds are seeing record inflows, despite the market turmoil.

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Hedge Funds Continue Fightback, as Equity Managers Soar Amid Lockdown-Easing and Activists Seize on Dislocation

Brief: Hedge funds are continuing to recover from sharp losses suffered earlier this year, notching up positive returns for the second successive month in May as economies slowly reopen following the coronavirus lockdown, new data from Hedge Fund Research shows. All long/short equity hedge fund strategies clawed back profits last month, including sector-specialist managers such as technology and materials, while activist and special situations funds are making hay amid widespread global market dislocations. The HFRI Fund Weighted Composite Index – which tracks the performance of more than 1,400 single manager funds of various strategies globally – gained 2.5 per cent in May, with equity hedge funds and event driven strategies leading the pack. The rise follows a 4.79 per cent advance in April – the index’s first positive return of 2020 and its biggest monthly rise since the 5.15 per cent gain in May 2009.

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For Private Assets, the Pandemic Repricing is Just Getting Started

Brief: Things move quickly in our digital world. An email sent from Vancouver is received in Mumbai in seconds. Rumours spread on Twitter in a heartbeat. And stocks and bonds react instantly to new information. In March, price declines were head-spinning as investors reacted to a deteriorating outlook. There’s a category of investments, however, that was slower to react. Prices for private investments such as commercial real estate and mortgages, private equity, infrastructure and private debt take time to adjust. The post-COVID reality will filter into their valuations over the course of the year. This sorting-out process will be fascinating to watch. Some private assets will skate through without a wobble while others will surprise us with bad news and writedowns. Here’s a sneak preview. Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs) trade on the stock exchange. So far this year, buyers and sellers have taken the sector down over 20 per cent. Private real estate funds work differently. They rely on independent valuations to set a price, a process done over the course of the year outside the emotion and volatility of the stock market.

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Contact Castle Hall to discuss due diligence

Castle Hall has a range of due diligence solutions to support asset owners and managers as our industry collectively faces unheralded challenges. This is not a time for "gotcha" due diligence - rather this is a time where investors and asset managers can and should work together to share best practices and protect assets. Please contact us if you'd like to discuss any aspect of how Covid-19 may impact your business.

Our briefing for Friday June 5, 2020:

  • The United States government received some good news on Friday when the latest job numbers revealed a 13.3% unemployment rate. While that number is still incredibly high, some economists had predicted the rate could spike to 20% when the month of May ended. The American economy added 2.5 million jobs in May after 20.7 million positions were cut in April.

  • Canada too unexpectedly added 289,600 jobs to its economy in May after seeing its unemployment number rise to record highs the month before. Canada’s unemployment rate in April was 13.7%, surpassing the previous high of 13.1% in 1982. Economists had predicted 500,000 jobs would be lost in the month of May, but with provinces reopening a little earlier than most expected, some businesses were able to rehire.

  • United Kingdom’s health secretary has pleaded with British citizens not to attend large demonstrations over the death of George Floyd due to the coronavirus. “Like so many I am appalled by the death of George Floyd and I understand why people are deeply upset but we are still facing a health crisis and coronavirus remains a real threat, said Matt Hancock. So please for the safety of your loved ones do not attend large gatherings including demonstrations of more than six people.” Planned anti-racism protests are expected to happen this weekend in the UK.

  • Australia tried a different approach in stopping or limiting their anti-racism protests: the court system. The police in the state of New South Wales took the protest planned by Black Lives Matter activists all the way to the New South Wales Supreme Court. The police wanted the protest banned, citing coronavirus safety concerns, and the court sided with them granting an injunction ruling the protest illegal. Protest organizers say they will continue to march, which may lead to heated interaction with police.  “We are not going to stop. We are going to march. We don't care what any acts of law tells us what to do because those acts and laws are killing us," said Letona Dungay.

  • Spain’s health minister says half of the population will move into the third and final stage of the country’s easing of coronavirus restrictions next week. Salvador Illa said 52% of the country will move into the third stage, which will allow those regions to regain control of the reopening process. So far, that process has been handled by the federal government. However, Spain’s two largest cities Madrid and Barcelona are only moving from stage one to stage two of their reopening phase.

  • The World Health Organization (WHO) has updated its recommendations on mask wearing and is now calling on nations to encourage the general public to wear fabric masks in areas where there continues to be an intense spread of the coronavirus. Previously, the WHO advised for people to not wear masks unless they were sick, or caring for someone who was sick, so masks could be kept available for health workers. The health organization also advised the general public to wear masks where physical distancing is difficult, such as public transport, in shops, or other confined/crowded environments.

Covid-19 – Due Diligence And Asset Management

‘Black People Are Locked Out’: $10 Billion Fund Manager On Race Inequality

Brief: John Rogers wants to be clear: corporate America is missing its moment to act on racial inequity. It’s not just rhetoric and donations that will make the difference, said the co-chief executive officer of $10 billion fund manager Ariel Investments, which focuses on value stocks. Businesses need to hire more African-Americans into senior roles -- including board seats and executive suites -- and work with other companies that have diverse leadership, he said. Rogers, 62, is one of the fund industry’s leading African-American figures after founding Ariel Investments nearly four decades ago. Its Ariel Fund has returned an average of about 10% a year since its inception in 1986, outpacing the Russell 2500 Value Index… On lasting change to prepare for post-Covid-19: “People are going to be downsizing and reconfiguring their offices. I think it’s pretty clear people are not going back to work in a normal way. There will be changes in the whole travel area, hotel companies too. A reduction in travel will go right to the bottom line. If there’s even 10% fewer people on the plane or your hotel, you’ll be hit drastically.”

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Stock Day Traders Are Unleashing Most Bullish Bets in Nine Years

Brief: Exuberance in American stocks is spurring speculators to unleash bullish bets in the options market at a rate unseen in almost a decade. Trading in contracts that wager on single names to increase in value has surged to the highest since 2011, with a whopping 2.3 million calls changing hands on Thursday, according to Cboe data. The bullish action is reminiscent of the explosion of retail interest on online forums on the eve of the coronavirus crisis in sleepy companies like Virgin Galactic Holdings Inc. and Plug Power Inc. This time around, the beneficiaries are concentrated in tech and cloud computing, as well as in single names rocked by the pandemic such as United Airlines Holdings Inc., according to Chris Murphy, co-head of derivatives strategy at Susquehanna. “We are seeing a lot of bullish options speculators, and I think the ‘message board flow’ is playing a part,” he said, referring to retail speculation typified on the Reddit forum r/wallstreetbets. Even after the S&P 500’s 40% surge in little more than two months, demand for single-stock hedges is muted, with the number of put options traded for every call slumping to the lowest in six years.

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Who Still Wants to Lease NYC Office Space? Russell Investments

Brief: Russell Investments’ lease on its New York office is up in September, and the firm has no new office space ready to go. But, according to the firm, it wants to find a new spot in the city.  Before the Covid-19 pandemic, the investment manager’s New York staff occupied the 14th floor of 3 Bryant Park in Manhattan, the same building that houses tech giant Salesforce. Now, Russell’s employees are working from home, and the September 30 deadline is looming.  Russell, in some ways, is in an enviable position as far as finance firms in New York go: a lease expiration could cut costs significantly. And it’s not unprecedented for finance firms to move amid crises. “I’ve seen a lot of different downturns and problems with New York real estate,” said Michael Colacino, president of SquareFoot, a New York-based commercial real estate company. After 9/11 and the dot com bubble burst, Colacino said, New York subleases rates doubled, increasing from about 20 percent to 40 to 45 percent. He added that something similar happened during the financial crisis of 2008.

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One of Canada’s Biggest Private Lenders Looking to Sell 11% of Loan Book

Brief: One of Canada’s largest private lenders is looking to sell as much as 11 per cent of its loans to help ride out the coronavirus crisis. Bridging Finance Inc. has already sold $30 million in loans (US$22 million) and plans to offload a further $170 million to other direct lenders and institutional investors, Chief Executive Officer David Sharpe said by phone. The firm, which has $1.8 billion in assets under management, froze redemptions on its funds in April. “We are selling some loans at par value to improve liquidity,” Sharpe said. “We are doing it in a prudent fashion, as we need to keep cash on hand for the revolvers and for foreign-exchange effects, and once we are comfortable with our liquidity, we will lift the gating of the funds.” The company lends to small and mid-sized companies involved in everything from milling flour to delivering groceries. Most of its funds are invested in collateral-based bridging loans, inventory and accounts-receivables financing. The pandemic, which forced the shutdown of many smaller businesses the sector typically lends to, is a major test for the asset class. The market has swelled to about US$820 billion globally from US$200 billion before the 2008 financial crisis. 

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Encap Goes Back to the Office

Brief: As Texas goes back to work, Houston-based EnCap Investments provides an early glimpse of what office re-integration may look like for many private equity firms. The firm, ranked 21 in the PEI 300, began its office re-integration on May 18 after Texas became one of the first states to begin reopening its economy. Craig Friou, deputy CFO and CCO at EnCap, told Private Funds CFO the firm began ‘phase one’ of its office re-integration by dividing staff up into ‘red’, ‘white’ and ‘blue’ teams. The red and blue teams alternate days in the office, with the white team, which includes some administrative staff, not returning at all for the time-being. Splitting the firm’s workforce into different teams not only designates which days staff are allowed to be in the office, but also groups individual teams together (ie, finance team is red, deal team is blue, etc.), causing employees to only work in close proximity with their immediate teams. The color-coded teams apply to all staff except for those at the partner level, who are free to come into the office on whichever days they like.

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Citi Says Wealthy Clients Are Holding Too Much Cash, Time to Buy

Brief: Wealthy clients of Citigroup Inc.’s private bank hold way too much cash, according to chief investment officer David Bailin, and he and his colleagues have big plans to help put an end to that. The private bank’s mid-year outlook, “From Fear to Prosperity: Investing in a New Economic Cycle,” released Thursday, recommends major changes to portfolios to reflect what Bailin called “the complexities and new realities of our time.” “There are plenty of things to buy,” Bailin said in a phone interview. “The more study that we did for the report, the more excited we got. The data is compelling.” The report’s big-picture outlook is for a “brief, extremely deep, rolling global recession” followed by a sharp snapback in global economic activity and “a partial, uneven recovery.” Underpinning recommendations for major changes to client portfolios is a projected five-year period of low interest rates. With fixed income no longer a natural hedge for equities, achieving diversification now includes greater long-term exposure to small- and medium-sized companies, as well as emerging market debt and equity, according to the report.

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Contact Castle Hall to discuss due diligence

Castle Hall has a range of due diligence solutions to support asset owners and managers as our industry collectively faces unheralded challenges. This is not a time for "gotcha" due diligence - rather this is a time where investors and asset managers can and should work together to share best practices and protect assets. Please contact us if you'd like to discuss any aspect of how Covid-19 may impact your business.

Our briefing for Thursday June 4, 2020:

  • The Center for Disease Controls and Prevention Director (CDC) believes the protests held in the United States and other parts of the world over George Floyd’s death could be a “seeding event” for more coronavirus outbreaks. Director Robert Redfield was speaking at a House Appropriations Committee meeting on Thursday and said he would like to see people who took part in protests to get tested for the virus over the next several days. Redfield has been concerned that the agency’s public health message for the coronavirus isn’t resonating with the American people pointing to protestors without masks, crowds gathering for Memorial Day and the SpaceX launch as recent examples.

  • Canadian federal data over the last 14 days has revealed Ontario and Quebec have accounted for more than 90% of national COVID-19 cases. That revelation, along with several others was noted in a news briefing by Canada’s Chief Public Health Officer Dr. Theresa Tam on Thursday. The latest figures show Canada could see between 98,000-108,000 cases and 7,700 and 9,400 deaths due to the coronavirus by June 15th.  The numbers also continue to show COVID-19 has hit the Canadian long-term care homes the hardest as those facilities represent 18% of total cases and an alarming 82% of Canada’s 7,495 deaths.

  • In a United Kingdom led conference hosted by Prime Minister Boris Johnson, $8.8 billion was pledged by global donors to fund vaccination programmes for children in low income countries over the next five years. This funding is projected to save up to 8 million lives from diseases such as measles and cholera. As the world’s attention turned to the coronavirus, the support is made to reinforce routine immunization programmes and for those who have stayed away from vaccination clinics in fear of COVID-19. The conference also launched a new advance market commitment (AMC) for vaccines developed successfully for COVID-19, so that poorer countries won’t be left behind in a potential vaccine nationalism by wealthier nations.

  • Spain had to walk back a comment made by its tourism minister that the country’s land borders would be open by June 22nd. The announcement made by the tourism minister caught neighbouring Portugal off-guard and Spain’s new stance is that they will reopen its land borders with coordination between Portugal and France.

  • Dubai police have fined more than 100 people for visiting their newly reopened public beaches for failing to adhere to coronavirus safety rules. Dubai allowed public beaches to reopen on May 30th after more than two months of closure. Those not wearing masks and not social distancing by at least six feet were fined on the spot by police. Fines are $817 USD for anyone not wearing a mask in public or failing to maintain social distancing.

  • Despite setting records of coronavirus cases on back-to-back days, Brazil is moving to ease restrictions due to the coronavirus. Earlier in the week, a number of non-essential businesses and venues in major cities such as Sao Paulo and Rio de Janeiro reopened for the first time in months. An epidemiologist at the University of Sao Paulo labeled the reopening an absurdity and outlook as awful. Not surprisingly considering his very public thoughts on the coronavirus, President Jair Bolsonaro seems okay with the reopening noting, “We are sorry for all the dead, but that’s everyone’s destiny.”

Covid-19 – Due Diligence And Asset Management

How a Hedge Fund Firm Sidestepped the First Quarter’s Market Carnage

Brief: Many hedge fund firms initially underestimated the threat of the coronavirus. Cinctive Capital was not one of them. Cinctive, founded by Diamondback Capital Management veterans Larry Sapanski and Richard Schimel, launched in September with backing from PAAMCO Launchpad, the joint venture between the Employees Retirement System of Texas and investment firm PAAMCO Prisma to seed and support emerging hedge fund managers. Cinctive, headquartered in New York City’s Hudson Yards, is a long-short equity fund using a multi-manager approach, with numerous investment teams covering roughly half a dozen sectors. One of those teams — a technology team focused on semiconductors and software — started looking into supply chain disruptions in China early this year. The team talked to factory workers and company managements based in China and shared their findings with Cinctive’s other sector teams. 

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America’s Billionaire Wealth Jumps by Over Half a Trillion During COVID-19 Pandemic: Report

Brief: The combined wealth of America’s billionaires, including Amazon.com Inc (AMZN.O) founder Jeff Bezos and Facebook Inc (FB.O) CEO Mark Zuckerberg, jumped over 19% or by half a trillion since the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic in the United States, according to a report published by the Institute for Policy Studies (IPS).  During the 11 weeks from March 18, when U.S. lockdowns started, the wealth of America’s richest people surged by over $565 billion, while 42.6 million workers filed for unemployment, the report said. “These statistics remind us that we are more economically and racially divided than at any time in decades,” said Chuck Collins, a co-author of the report.During the 11 week period, Bezos saw his wealth soar by about $36.2 billion while Zuckerberg’s fortune surged by about $30.1 billion. Tesla Inc (TSLA.O) Chief Executive Elon Musk’s net worth also rose $14.1 billion.The past week also saw the wealth of U.S. billionaires jump by $79 billion, according to the report.

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Wall Street Warning to Corporate America: Get Cash While you Can

Brief: Bankers have a message for America’s debt-laden companies: raise money now, because things could get a lot worse. The gradual reopening of businesses after months-long shutdowns and a pick up in manufacturing activity have given investors reason for optimism in recent weeks. But underwriters who cater to heavily indebted corporations are offering their clients a bleak preview of what may lie ahead. The long list of worries includes a new wave of coronavirus contagion in the fall, an extended period of double-digit unemployment, a spike in defaults and a slower-than-expected economic recovery as businesses around the globe adapt to the realities of prolonged social distancing. Of course, pitching bond sales to companies is part of the job description, and corporate treasurers expect nothing less from bankers whose bonuses are tied to how many deals they do. Still, the grim warnings to stockpile cash reflect how the rally that credit markets have enjoyed since the Federal Reserve took action may be obfuscating an economic picture still fraught with risks.

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Wall Street Week Ahead: Bond Investors Look for Fed to Justify Steepening Yield Curve

Brief: Expectations that the global economy has dodged the worst-case scenarios for the coronavirus pandemic have led to a dramatic selloff in U.S. government bonds from their record highs, pushing the yield curve to its steepest level since March. Investors will get a chance next week to see whether the U.S. Federal Reserve agrees with their optimism. The U.S. central bank is expected to hold a two-day meeting that will conclude Wednesday, the first since a meeting in April in which Fed Chair Jerome Powell said that the U.S. economy could feel the weight of the economic shutdown for more than a year. While the Fed could introduce additional bond-buying programs known as quantitative easing or yield-curve control measures to target short-term rates, some fund managers say they expect that yields would need to rise significantly from here to justify any intervention in the bulk of the curve. Instead, they are watching for hints that the central bank believes the worst part of the coronavirus crisis has passed.

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Standard Life Tells Staff to Work from Home for Rest of 2020

Brief: Standard Life Aberdeen Plc told most of its U.K. staff to work from home for the rest of the year as other asset managers mull how the pandemic has reshaped the future use of their offices. The firm told its 4,900 U.K. employees that the majority shouldn’t expect to come into the office in 2020, according to a June 2 internal memo seen by Bloomberg. Janus Henderson Group Plc workers and BNP Paribas Asset Management’s London staff will also continue to work from home for the foreseeable future, while Baillie Gifford is planning a phased return of employees in coming months, according to representatives of the firms. “One of the consistent messages across the U.K. is that, where possible, people should work from home if they can and this very much applies to financial services,” Mike Tumilty, chief operating officer at Standard Life, said in the note. “It has become evident that while we may see some easing of working restrictions, we do not expect this principle to change materially for the foreseeable future.” While there are some signs of business slowly returning to normal as lockdown measures are eased, many financial firms are still keeping employees away from their offices.

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GMO Says Stock Market Rally Has Gone Too Far

Brief: GMO has shifted its stance on equities since mid-March, when the firm was willing to wade into plunging markets to buy stocks globally amid the coronavirus tumult. U.S. and developed-market stocks have rallied too far from their 2020 low, according to Ben Inker, the head of GMO’s asset allocation team. The firm has reduced its equity exposure by shorting equity futures against the stocks it holds in those regions, while continuing to like its long bets in emerging markets, Inker said by phone. “Stocks in the U.S. and most of the developed markets look to us to be a pretty bad risk-reward tradeoff,” he said. “They’re already priced for the best outcome you could reasonably expect.” That’s a change from late March, when stocks globally, apart from U.S. large cap, appeared cheap or priced at fair value, according to Inker. The equities market went on to produce in two months the types of returns GMO would expect to see over five to seven years, he said, all while the prospects of the economy remain uncertain. “We are in the midst of the worst economic crisis the world has seen really since the Great Depression,” said Inker. “We’d love to see stocks priced for more potential pain.”

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Contact Castle Hall to discuss due diligence

Castle Hall has a range of due diligence solutions to support asset owners and managers as our industry collectively faces unheralded challenges. This is not a time for "gotcha" due diligence - rather this is a time where investors and asset managers can and should work together to share best practices and protect assets. Please contact us if you'd like to discuss any aspect of how Covid-19 may impact your business.

Our briefing for Wednesday June 3, 2020:

  • One of the United States leading infectious disease experts struck an optimistic tone believing by early 2021, America will have “a couple of hundred million doses” of a vaccine for the coronavirus. Dr. Anthony Fauci, a key figure on the White House’s coronavirus task force granted an interview to the Journal of the American Medical Association on Tuesday and said four or five trials are underway for vaccine candidates. Many public health experts, including Dr. Fauci have said previously it could take 12 to 18 months to develop a vaccine.

  • Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau will continue making the case for a coordinated global response to the coronavirus pandemic in order to limit the impact on some of the world’s poorest countries. Prime Minister Trudeau was set to speak on Wednesday to leaders and heads of state during a virtual summit of the Organization of African, Caribbean and Pacific States (OACPS). Prime Minister Trudeau made a similar plea last week while co-hosting a United Nations summit, alongside the UN secretary general and Jamaican Prime Minister.

  • United Kingdom Prime Minister Boris Johnson has defended the government’s decision to impose a 14-day quarantine for people arriving in the UK as of June 8th. Critics of the policy note it is pointless to impose a quarantine against arrivals from countries with much lower infection rates than the UK. Meanwhile, travel and hospitality sectors believe the quarantine will leave others looking for another travel destination, significantly hurting industries already reeling from the coronavirus pandemic. During a news conference on Wednesday, Prime Minister Johnson said his government would explore the possibilities of travel corridors with countries that had low rates of infection, but only when the evidence shows that it is safe to do so.

  • Germany will lift the travel ban to 29 European countries as of June 15th. The ban currently in place will be changed to travel guidelines. For instance, while travel to the UK will be allowed, it will be recommended to avoid due to the country’s upcoming 14-day quarantine for any incoming travellers.

  • Sweden’s state epidemiologist has admitted for the first time that the country should have imposed more restrictions to avoid having such a high death toll from the coronavirus. During an interview on Swedish radio, Anders Tegnell admitted, “[i]f we would encounter the same disease, with exactly what we know about it today, I think we would land midway between what Sweden did and what the rest of the world did.” Sweden’s government announced earlier in the week it would appoint a commission to investigate the country’s approach to the coronavirus before the summer. Sweden has had close to 4,500 deaths due to the coronavirus, a higher death rate than countries such as France or the United States.

  • The Spanish parliament granted its sixth and last state of emergency to the government, which will expire on June 21st. Spain is now in its third month of an extended state of emergency, which gives the government continued authority to restrict movement across the country. Spain is currently in stage two of its three stage approach to lift coronavirus restrictions. Once in the third stage, the country’s 17 regional governments will have the power to determine the pace and course of how they emerge from the pandemic.

  • In India, 100,000 people have been evacuated, including COVID-19 patients as the region is experiencing its first cyclone in more than a century. The Indian state of Maharashtra has been hit harder due to the coronavirus than any other state in India. A total of 72,300 cases and 2,465 deaths have been recorded in the state due to the coronavirus.

Covid-19 – Due Diligence And Asset Management

Private Equity Gets Trump Administration’s Nod to Tap 401Ks

Brief: Private-equity firms notched a major win in Washington with the Trump administration paving the way for the industry to tap a massive pot of money that has long been off limits: the trillions of dollars held in Americans’ retirement accounts. The Labor Department issued guidance Wednesday effectively allowing 401(k) plans to invest in buyout firms. The agency said the move will bolster investment options for consumers and let them access an asset class that can provide better returns than stocks and bonds. In a statement, Labor Secretary Eugene Scalia said the action “will help Americans saving for retirement gain access to alternative investments that often provide strong returns.” The announcement is a significant de-regulatory decision that private-equity lobbyists have sought for years. It is sure to face harsh criticism from consumer groups and progressive Democratic lawmakers, who argue that high-fee private equity firms are inappropriate for unsophisticated investors because the industry locks-up clients’ money for years and invests in businesses seen as far more risky than a plain-vanilla bond fund.

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CQS Rocked by Pandemic Losses

Brief: The outsiders that Michael Hintze brought in to his secretive hedge fund firm didn't last long. Nor did their growth plans. The billionaire's firm, known as CQS, a bastion of money-making whose flagship fund has returned more than three times the average of hedge fund peers since it opened in 2005, is now headed in reverse. The Hintze-managed fund plunged as much as 45% in March and April — its worst-ever loss — missing the rebound that followed the initial shock from the coronavirus pandemic even as peers recovered to post gains in April. More than $3 billion of assets were erased, leaving the firm with $16 billion. And that doesn't include potential withdrawals from the fund's clients, who are required to give six months' notice. "It's going to be very difficult for them to attract new assets," said Don Steinbrugge, head of Agecroft Partners, a Richmond, Va.-based consultant that helps hedge funds gather assets. "If I was an existing investor, I would be concerned about significant redemptions from the fund over time, which could potentially cause the quality of the fund to erode."

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Hong Kong Hedge Fund Offers 100% Coverage on Losses. For a Fee

Brief: A Hong Kong hedge fund is offering to cover 100% of any losses in a bid to attract investors that have been avoiding the sector amid the Covid-19 pandemic. Infini Capital Management Ltd. is gauging investor interest for full loss insurance on a new class of shares in a fund it launched last year. In exchange, the firm would charge a performance fee as high as 50%, more than double the industry standard. Although Infini says the offer isn’t linked to growing tension in Hong Kong sparked by China’s new security law, it shows the extent to which hedge funds are willing to boost enticements to attract fresh money. Investors yanked $31 billion in the first four months from the global hedge fund industry as the spread of the Covid-19 virus triggered market selloffs in March and led to the worst monthly performance since the 2008 global financial crisis, according to eVestment. Capital raising has been especially challenging for younger funds. “This offering is to hopefully get some investors over the edge who might still have some concerns about being an early investor in Infini,” Chief Operating Officer Michael Friedlander said in an interview.

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Covid-19: How Fund Managers Mitigated Systemic Risks

Brief: Once considered damaging for fund manager reputations, liquidity management tools - such as redemptions on restrictions - have gained further acceptance amid the Covid-19 crisis. And what’s more, these tools have slowed the spread of market contagion, says Xavier Parain, CEO of FundRock Management Company. The Covid-19 crisis has changed so much about daily and commercial life - and the fund management industry is no exception. Business continuity plans and procedures - tested more frequently than ever implemented in the past - have been deployed universally. Portfolio managers, risk officers, due diligence professionals and others immediately and seamlessly transitioned to working from home, crucially, without any major impact for investors. This crisis has caused a rethink on redemption restrictions and other liquidity management tools. As the global financial crisis (GFC) of 2007-2008 reminded us, a “run” on a financial institution takes different forms and frequently occurs hidden from public sight.

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Fiera Capital Chief Optimistic COVID-19 Vaccine Can be Found in Next 12 Months

Brief: Quebec’s largest independent asset manager is ready to bet one or more COVID-19 treatments will be found in the next 12 months, pushing global stock markets higher. Fiera Capital chief executive officer Jean-Guy Desjardins says there’s an almost two-thirds probability that a vaccine will be found by June 2021. In the meantime, odds are that an existing drug can lessen COVID-19’s effects and reduce mortality rates, said Desjardins, a veteran money manager who founded Montreal-based Fiera in 2003 and counts four decades of experience in the investment industry. After plunging in March amid the pandemic’s global spread, stock markets in North America and elsewhere have rebounded on optimism over a second-half economic recovery. Canada’s benchmark S&P/TSX Composite Index has gained more than 30 per cent since hitting a multiyear low in late March, though it’s still down about 10 per cent for the year.

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The II Fear Index: No Business-as-Usual Anytime Soon

Brief: Around the world, businesses are beginning to reopen from the coronavirus pandemic. But asset owners and investment managers won’t be returning to normal anytime soon, according to the latest II Fear Index. Institutional investors participating in the weekly poll broadly indicated they would continue to stay home for at least the next month, with just 15 percent planning to return to the office in June. However, a majority believed they would be back at their workplace by fall: Thirty percent said day-to-day office work would resume in July or August, while another 30 percent predicted it would happen in September or October. There was less consensus on the subject of in-person meetings. While the highest proportion — 31 percent — indicated they would begin meeting with clients or asset managers in September or October, another 28 percent anticipated that they would not have any face-to-face meetings until 2021. Respondents were least optimistic on the prospects of business travel, with the plurality — 38 percent — predicting they would not resume traveling for work until next year. 

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Contact Castle Hall to discuss due diligence

Castle Hall has a range of due diligence solutions to support asset owners and managers as our industry collectively faces unheralded challenges. This is not a time for "gotcha" due diligence - rather this is a time where investors and asset managers can and should work together to share best practices and protect assets. Please contact us if you'd like to discuss any aspect of how Covid-19 may impact your business.

Our briefing for Tuesday June 2, 2020:

  • In the United States as all 50 states have at least partially reopened, several southern states have reported sharp increases in COVID-19 infections. Alabama, South Carolina and Virginia all saw cases rise at least 35% or more in the week ended May 31st, compared to the prior week. Cases have risen in 17 states overall, according to a Reuters report. United States Surgeon General Dr. Jerome Adams is the latest in a number of health experts who fears new outbreaks of the coronavirus will result from the nationwide protests of George Floyd’s death. In an interview, Dr. Adams highlighted the coronavirus pandemic has disproportionately affected communities of colour, noting "I remain concerned about the public health consequences both of individual and institutional racism [and] people out protesting in a way that is harmful to themselves and to their communities.”

  • The doctor who was responsible for a new cluster of coronavirus cases in the Canadian province of New Brunswick is speaking out. Dr. Jean-Robert Ngola said he did not self-isolate upon returning from an overnight return trip to neighbouring province Quebec to pick up his four-year old daughter. The mother of the child had to travel to Africa for her father’s funeral. Dr. Ngola, who isn’t showing any symptoms, is unsure of where he obtained the virus noting, "Who can say? … The virus is circulating everywhere. … How many people are unwitting carriers?” Since word has circulated of his case, Dr. Ngola says he is now the target of racist harassment, false reports have been made to the police, and feels abandoned by public health officials. There are 12 new cases of the coronavirus in northern New Brunswick since May 21st. Prior, the province had gone two weeks without a new case.

  • The United Kingdom government is considering a travel corridor with other countries who have low rates of coronavirus infection. Those nations that would fall under that criteria would not have to adhere to the UK’s 14-day self-isolation period, which is due to take effect on June 8th. The UK travel and hospitality sectors have warned that the government’s quarantine plan will further damage their industries which have already been hit hard by the coronavirus pandemic.

  • In France, cafes and restaurants were allowed to open for the first time in 11 weeks after being closed due to the coronavirus lockdown. Restaurants and cafes still have to limit the number of customers due to social distancing rules and in the Paris region, customers can only be served on outdoor terraces until June 22nd. France’s finance minister has noted the economy will likely shrink by 11% this year but is convinced it will rebound in 2021 with the help of government support.

  • Wuhan China’s Health Commission announced Tuesday that it had completed 9.9 million coronavirus tests of its residents with no new confirmed cases. There were 300 asymptomatic cases discovered in the testing, but China does not count asymptomatic cases as confirmed cases. The testing began on May 14th for the city of 11 million people, which was ground zero for the coronavirus epidemic.

  • A Brazilian university study is projecting the country could reach 1 million cases of the coronavirus and 50,000 deaths by the end of the month. The study conducted by the Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul predicts the number of COVID-19 cases in Brazil will double in the next 18 days. As of Tuesday, Brazil has reported close to 527,000 cases and close to 30,000 deaths.

  • Japan has announced the approval of saliva-based tests for the coronavirus as a way of boosting testing rates as the Tokyo government issued a stay-at-home alert following an increase in infections. The state of emergency was lifted in Tokyo last week, but the local government is urging people to stay at home for non-essential business and to practice social distancing as 34 new cases were reported on Tuesday, the most since May 9th. Japan’s testing rate is well behind other industrialized nations such as the United States, Italy and South Korea leaving critics to say the low rate of testing is making it difficult to trace the virus.

Covid-19 – Due Diligence And Asset Management

Private Equity Lands Billion-Dollar Backdoor Hospital Bailout

Brief: As the coronavirus pandemic upended the U.S. health-care system, EmCare IAH Emergency Physicians, a Houston staffing company owned by private equity firm KKR, made a little-noticed request of the government: It applied for a $317,379 interest-free loan. KKR had for years paid lobbyists to fend off efforts to ban a practice known as surprise billing used by EmCare and other providers that has driven up the cost of health care. But that didn’t stop the U.S. Health and Human Services Department from approving the loan and almost 300 others totaling more than $60 million to subsidiaries of KKR-owned companies. Shut out from many coronavirus relief programs, private equity companies have found a back door at HHS, where they have borrowed at least $1.5 billion, according to a Bloomberg News analysis of more than 40,000 loans disclosed by the department…  Health-care facilities owned by Apollo Global Management, which started the year with about $46 billion, received at least $500 million in HHS loans. And Cerberus Capital Management’s Steward Health Care System LLC, which threatened to close a hard-hit Pennsylvania hospital, received at least $400 million in loans. Last month Cerberus was working to quadruple the size of a fund to invest in distressed loans to $750 million.

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Wall Street Sends Wine, Masks to Clients with Steakhouses Closed

Brief: Wall Street investment funds won’t let a pandemic and riots stop them from wooing clients. With boozy steakhouse meetings no longer an option, evenings on the town are being replaced with wine tastings via conference call and online concerts. There are also care packages tailored to the times -- packed with masks -- and donations to food banks and charities. Disruptions set off by the coronavirus pandemic, now complicated by protests and curfews, are prompting asset managers overseeing products such as mutual funds and exchange-traded funds to figure out new ways to remotely grab the attention of wealthy customers, institutional investors and financial advisers. That often means trying to hobnob in the virtual world. It’s accelerating a shift that was already underway, as big firms rely less on social outings to generate and work leads, said Amanda Walters, principal at Casey Quirk, a division of Deloitte Consulting. “Asset managers are asking, ‘Do we need to be face-to-face as much as we were before?’ And the answer is probably no,” she said.

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Goldman Sachs Commits to New Central Paris Headquarters

Brief: U.S. bank Goldman Sachs (GS.N) has signed a lease for a new Paris headquarters building, committing to a city centre office development at a time when many banks are weighing scaling back their presence in cities amid the COVID-19 pandemic. Goldman has signed a 12-year deal for 6,500 square metres of space at 83 Marceau, an office building being redeveloped a block away from the Arc de Triomphe, developer SFL said on Tuesday. The commitment represents 81% of the building’s floor space. The project is expected to be completed in the third quarter of 2021.

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Relief Rally or Bear Market Bubble? For Investors, it’s Hard to Tell

Brief: What started as a bear market bounce in U.S. equities has transformed into one of the most dramatic rallies in memory, leaving investors looking to past rebounds, options markets and technical analysis for clues on how far it could run. The S&P 500 is up 37% since its late March close as of Monday and the Nasdaq Composite is near a fresh record after a surge that has seemingly ignored widespread economic upheaval and uncertainty over the coronavirus pandemic. The rally’s speed has left investors in a quandary. While few are willing to bet against a rebound that has steam-rolled most forecasts, some are concerned the market has become detached from economic reality by expectations of unlimited support from the Federal Reserve and U.S. lawmakers. The S&P 500, for instance, now trades at 21.2 times earnings, its highest level since 2002, even as unemployment is at levels last seen in the Great Depression. A Reuters poll showed investors expect Friday’s U.S. employment data to show a loss of 7.45 million jobs cut in May, after a record 20.5 million in the previous month.

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No One Knows What Their Bond Fund is Worth

Brief: During the worst of the market chaos in March, some credit hedge funds suspended redemptions because they didn’t know what their holdings were worth and the prices of fixed income exchange-traded funds were out of whack with the net asset value of their underlying bonds. The prices for stocks, which trade on an exchange, are available in real-time. But bonds still trade over-the-counter, meaning a dealer and an investor negotiate a price, whether on a screen of over the phone. As a result, there is no central place to go for bond prices. Bond mutual funds, for example, use what are called evaluated prices from third parties such as ICE Data Services. ICE has analysts and algorithms gathering and assessing multiple sources of information scattered throughout the market to provide evaluated bond prices to investors, asset managers, dealers, and others. In March and April, as markets cratered and transactions ground to a halt, that information evaporated.

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The Buy-Side Trader is Getting Outsourced in Coronavirus Crisis

Brief: A once-in-century disruption to securities trading is intensifying a revolution in how some investment firms conduct business. With at-home traders navigating the wildest market swings in history, more money managers are tapping outsourcing companies to buy and sell financial assets on their behalf. With their employees at risk of falling sick or losing regular access to market venues, the buy side in lockdown is turning to a booming industry that’s drawing big-gun entrants including State Street Corp., AllianceBernstein Holding LP and Wells Fargo & Co. In so doing, the largest providers are reporting a surge in revenues as transaction volumes jump and new clients sign up. Outsourced traders essentially act as a middleman between the buy side and sell side in handling trading flows. Some outsourced trading divisions are run inside bigger financial services firms, like Jefferies Financial Group Inc., while others operate as small, standalone shops. Their pitch to asset managers: Ensuring best execution with an extensive network of brokerages and high-speed technology, which can be expensive for smaller funds to maintain on their own.

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Contact Castle Hall to discuss due diligence

Castle Hall has a range of due diligence solutions to support asset owners and managers as our industry collectively faces unheralded challenges. This is not a time for "gotcha" due diligence - rather this is a time where investors and asset managers can and should work together to share best practices and protect assets. Please contact us if you'd like to discuss any aspect of how Covid-19 may impact your business.

Our briefing for Monday June 1, 2020:

  • In the midst of the coronavirus pandemic, the United States are dealing with mass protests over the death of George Floyd, an unarmed black man at the hands of four former Minnesota police officers. Health officials are concerned, along with state and city leaders of spreading the coronavirus due to the close contact of the protestors. While many are wearing a mask, as the situation escalates with police and national guard members, health officials fear the use of tear gas and other methods are forcing protestors to cough and sneeze, which could spread the virus. As the unrest grows in America, the tension doesn’t appear to be dissipating anytime soon as United States President Donald Trump told state governors on Monday they must be tougher and use more aggressive tactics on the violent protestors.

  • The World Health Organization (WHO) have called on President Trump to reconsider terminating their relationship with them over the handling of the coronavirus pandemic. On Friday during a news briefing, President Trump announced the United States would end its relationship with the WHO but provided no further details on what that separation would like. “The US government's and its' people's contribution and generosity toward global health over many decades has been immense, and it has made a great difference in public health all around the world," WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said. "It is WHO's wish for this collaboration to continue."

  • Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said the federal government will be accelerating its plan of delivering infrastructure funding to cities who badly need it after suffering a hit from the coronavirus pandemic. Prime Minister Trudeau said $2.2 billion in annual infrastructure will be delivered in one payment this month to give municipalities earlier access to the funds instead of waiting on multiple payments. Government opposition have said the help is too little too late, and municipalities are only receiving money they were entitled too, not any additional help in operating shortfalls.

  • Health officials in the United Kingdom have told Prime Minister Boris Johnson he has eased the coronavirus restrictions too soon in the country, which will risk a spike in infections. As of Monday, some school classes were allowed to resume, up to six people can meet outside and two million vulnerable people who were sheltering in place, were also allowed to spend time outdoors. Health officials believe the government doesn’t have a fully functioning tracking system in place to track new outbreaks and media reports showing Britons enjoying the nice weather at beaches, with little social distancing over the weekend, did nothing to ease their concerns.

  • India began loosening some coronavirus-related restrictions on Monday even though the country is experiencing it largest daily increases of COVID-19 cases. Indian’s health authorities said close to 8,400 cases were recorded in back-to-back days. The country will shorten the nationwide curfew and allow some states and territories to decide if they want to resume intrastate and interstate travel. The first phase of India’s three-part reopening formally begins on June 8th.

  • Familiar traffic jams and crowds of commuters greeted those in the Philippine capital of Manila as one of the world’s longest lockdown restrictions was lifted. Public transportation could only carry a fraction of the people they normally could due to social distancing measures, which meant commuters had wait for hours to catch a ride. Police have warned citizens they will go after violators who don’t wear face masks, or don’t observe social distancing.

  • In south Australia further restrictions have been eased as some business will be allowed to open their doors for the first time in more than two months. Australians will be allowed to return to the gym, go to the movies and have a seat at the bar, but capacity limits are still in place. For instance, a maximum of 80 people are allowed inside a gym and pubs in New South Wales can have up to 50 guests, instead of 10.

Covid-19 – Due Diligence And Asset Management

‘Appalled’ – Here’s What Wall Street CEOs are Saying about the Killing of George Floyd and Protests Rocking US Cities

Brief: Wall Street CEOs expressed horror, anger and empathy in staff emails and messages posted to social media as protests continued to roil U.S. cities in the week after the death of George Floyd in Minneapolis. The May 25 death of Floyd, who had been handcuffed when a police officer kneeled on his neck for more than eight minutes, sparked introspection and calls to fight racism by the biggest American financial firms. Floyd’s death followed the recent deaths of other black citizens including Ahmaud Arbery in Georgia and Breonna Taylor in Kentucky. Here’s what they said…

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Wall Street and Fed Fly Blind as Coronavirus upends Annual Stress Tests

Brief: U.S. financial regulators, banks and their investors will get their first glimpse into the health of the nation’s banking system as it confronts soaring corporate and consumer defaults in the economic crisis sparked by the novel coronavirus. And no-one, including the U.S. Federal Reserve which sets the annual bank “stress test” exams, has a clue what to expect. “That is the $100,000 question. Actually, it’s much bigger than that and I am sure the Fed is working hard to get it right. We’re curious, and we don’t have clarity,” said Kevin Fromer, CEO of the Financial Services Forum, which represents the biggest banks in the U.S. That could mean banks may be on the hook for billions more in capital than they had anticipated, which could ultimately force them to slash dividends, slim down their balance sheets or reduce lending.

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Pinto Endured Lonely Weeks Co-Running JPMorgan as World Lurched

Brief: Daniel Pinto checked into a hotel in midtown Manhattan around 2 a.m. on a Friday in early March, hoping to get a little rest after an epically hard day. Things were about to get much worse. His slog that day had begun in London with a routine call with his boss, JPMorgan Chase & Co. Chief Executive Officer Jamie Dimon. But just a few hours later Dimon was rushed into emergency heart surgery, and the board named Pinto — who oversees the firm’s Wall Street operations — to temporarily run the bank alongside Gordon Smith, the head of its consumer business. Pinto flew to New York for what he thought would be a brief stay. Then markets began panicking over the coronavirus pandemic. He didn’t check out until a month later. “I’ve seen crises my whole life,” Pinto said in an interview. Yet “we haven’t seen a crisis of this magnitude. It’s probably short-lived but very deep, and it’s everywhere around the world.”

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Howard Marks: Get Used to Uncertainty

Brief: When will the Covid-19 pandemic end? What’s going to happen to the economy? Investors have a lot of questions about the future — but no one, according to Howard Marks, has the answers. In his most recent client memo, the Oaktree Capital chairman addressed the current state of uncertainty and what he described as the “futility of forecasting,” arguing that not even expertise in a given field necessarily equips a person to predict what will happen.  It’s an argument the credit investor has made before, including in his last missive to clients in early May. In this newest letter, released publicly on Thursday, Marks explained that forecasting is impossible because the future is path-dependent — in other words, whatever happens between now and then can affect the ultimate outcome. “Not only how will the virus behave, morph, travel, react to warm weather and infect, but also how fast will we reopen the economy, how will people behave when we reopen it, and what will the virus do at that time?” he wrote.

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Private Equity Firms and Investors Overcome Covid-19 Fundraising Hurdles

Brief: Increased information flow, more transparency and informal settings have mitigated a lack of in-person meetings as investors and fund managers find ways to overcome roadblocks resulting from the coronavirus pandemic. Face-to-face meetings, a traditional linchpin in the process of checking out fund managers before investors make commitments, have been prevented by government restrictions aimed at reining in the pandemic. Investors, placement agents and fund managers say virtual meetings using video conferencing and presentations using other technologies have kept fundraising largely on track. In addition, the adaptations often lead general partners to offer greater stores of information on investments, returns, deals in the pipeline and strategy to prospective limited partners, helping to compensate for the lack of in-person visits and to increase investor confidence. “I had never had the opportunity to see these general partners in a time of stress, how on top they are of what private equity can do with and for their portfolio companies,” said a limited partner who is considering a follow-up capital commitment with a fund manager.

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Nordea Liquidates L/S Equity Fund as Boutique Shuts

Brief: Nordea has liquidated one of its Alt Ucits strategies following the decision of its sub-adviser Madrague Capital Partners to close the firm.In a statement to shareholders, Nordea said Madrague Capital Partners’ decision to withdraw its asset management licence led to the termination of the Nordea 1 – European Long Short EquityFund.The fund was first launched in December 2018 and was the first fund since Nordea tool 40% stake in the investment boutique. Madrague Capital Partners’ investment team consisted of five members, including CIO Lars Franstedt and portfolio manager and CEO Martin Persson.‘The board of directors of Nordea 1 Sicav considers that this event is detrimental to the fund’s performance and therefore to the interest of the fund’s shareholders and has consequently decided to put the Fund into liquidation with immediate effect,’ the firm stated. Madrague Capital Partners was approached for a comment but didn’t respond at the time of the publication.

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Contact Castle Hall to discuss due diligence

Castle Hall has a range of due diligence solutions to support asset owners and managers as our industry collectively faces unheralded challenges. This is not a time for "gotcha" due diligence - rather this is a time where investors and asset managers can and should work together to share best practices and protect assets. Please contact us if you'd like to discuss any aspect of how Covid-19 may impact your business.

Our briefing for Friday May 29, 2020:

  • In the United States, a new study shows more than two million New Yorkers had been infected with COVID-19 by the end of March. State data shows only 189,000 cases two months ago, which leaves a massive 1.8 million gap. The new study conducted by the University at Albany notes there are several reasons for the gap including people’s symptoms ranging from mild to none at all, and therefore they never sought medical attention. Others might have wanted to get tested, but couldn’t find a doctor to test them due to the shortage at the time of the pandemic. New York state and New York City in particular became the epicentre of the coronavirus epidemic in the United States.

  • In Canada, the province of New Brunswick has seen a cluster of cases in a zoned region after easing their coronavirus restrictions. The issue isn’t so much the cluster, it’s who was responsible for the initial cause. A doctor who travelled into Quebec, came back without mandatorily isolating for two weeks, and went back to work in a local area hospital may have exposed up to 150 people (initial tracking/tracing estimate – the official number is likely much more). The doctor has been suspended and COVID-19 testing has been made available to anyone in the region of 25,000 people.

  • The United Kingdom has extended its £6.8 billion stimulus package to counter the mass unemployment rate in the country until the end of October. Companies will start contributing to the government’s furloughed workers scheme starting in August, covering five per cent of the costs. The number goes up to 10 per cent in September and 20 per cent in October. According to the independent Office for Budget Responsibility, unemployment in the UK could rise by 2 million due to the coronavirus.

  • As of June 15th, Greece will open its borders to 29 countries. Notable absences off the initial list of countries are people from the United States, UK, France, Spain and Italy. Chinese, German, Israeli and Australian tourists will be allowed to fly direct to Athens and the northern city of Thessaloniki. The list will be expanded on July 1st, according to the country’s tourism ministry.

  • Sweden’s handling of the coronavirus epidemic has left them on the outside looking in to bordering countries as they look to reopen. Norway and Denmark have agreed to each other’s tourists to visit the country, but excluded Sweden whose death rate per capita is 10 times higher than Norway and four times higher than Denmark. Finland too haven’t opened their borders to Sweden, instead bubbling up with other Baltic countries such as Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania.

  • Moscow health authorities have revised the city’s death toll for April with now more than double the amount of people dying from the coronavirus. The official number of deaths last month is 1,561, up from 636. Russia’s official number of COVID-19 deaths has been relatively low compared to other countries with similar numbers, leading many to believe the official counting methods have been misleading on purpose. In the report, Moscow’s health department noted new counting guidelines, which included even the most debatable cases in its overall figures.

  • Brazil had a reported 26,417 cases of the coronavirus on Thursday, a new daily record. The nationwide total was closing in on 440,000 cases as Thursday marked the third day in a row Brazil recorded more than 1,000 deaths in a day.

Covid-19 – Due Diligence And Asset Management

Morgan Stanley is Planning to Bring Traders Back to New York Headquarters Next Month, Sources Say

Brief: Personnel to its New York headquarters in mid to late June, according to people with knowledge of the situation. The firm expects that, at least at first, only a small number of traders and workers in other departments will make use of the option, said the people, who declined to be identified speaking about the bank’s internal goals. Morgan Stanley’s plans make it one of the first Wall Street firms to bring more employees back to the trading floor after months of working from home. Rival Goldman Sachs has also said it would bring some trading personnel back to offices in the next several weeks, and together the firms will provide an early test of whether the financial capital of the world can safely reopen amid the coronavirus pandemic. Morgan Stanley managers have been plotting for weeks on how to bring employees back to its Times Square headquarters, helped in part by what they’ve learned by reopening their Asia offices, according to the people.

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Alan Howard’s Hedge Fund Soars 100% in Virus-Fueled Chaos

Brief: Billionaire Alan Howard has doubled his investors’ money in the coronavirus crisis. The macro trader has returned about 100% this year in the hedge fund that he personally runs, according to people with knowledge of the matter. Most of the gain was in March when the pandemic sent the global markets into a tailspin, the people said, asking not to be identified because the information is private. A spokesman for Jersey-based Brevan Howard Asset Management declined to comment. Howard’s return marks one of the most profitable money-making phases of his investing career and is the highest achieved by a major macro hedge fund this year. The no-nonsense, fast-talking trader is leading his firm’s dramatic turnaround after years of mediocre returns and an exodus of investors. Howard’s AH Master Fund was started in 2017 to make riskier bets in order to achieve high returns. It has a handful of external investors, money from the firm’s flagship hedge fund and Howard’s own money. Every detail of the fund is kept top secret by the firm, according to people familiar with the company.

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Citi Breaks with Rivals on Whether Work From Home is Permanent

Brief: Citigroup Inc. plans to bring its workers back to the office when the Covid-19 pandemic ends, breaking with a raft of competitors planning to make remote operations permanent for many staff. “Our goal is to get our employees back,” Chief Executive Officer Mike Corbat said Friday at a virtual investor conference. Working remotely has definite advantages, Corbat said, including giving him the ability to meet with clients and employees from around the world all in the same week. But he said the firm doesn’t plan to leave employees at home permanently. The pandemic has forced companies to send thousands of employees to their home offices as a way to slow the spread of the deadly virus. For some workers, including those at Citigroup competitors Bank of New York Mellon Corp. and Synchrony Financial, the changes may be permanent, officials there have said. Citigroup, with roughly 200,000 employees around the world, has already begun bringing staff back to some of its offices in Asia, with the Hong Kong office at 50% capacity and Taiwan at 75%, Corbat said.

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Poorly-Timed Healthcare Buyouts Bruise KKR and Blackstone

Brief: Two big health-care buyouts are shaping up to be among the worst-performing private-equity investments in recent years. The coronavirus pandemic is only the latest reason why. Physician-staffing firms Envision Healthcare Corp. and TeamHealth Holdings Inc., whose emergency-room workers are ubiquitous throughout the country, were purchased by KKR & Co. and Blackstone Group Inc. in 2018 and 2017 for roughly $6bn and $3bn, respectively. The private-equity firms bought the companies, which contract with hospitals to provide them with an array of medical professionals, with plans to boost revenue and accelerate growth through acquisitions. As is typical in leveraged buyouts, they funded the deals with ample debt, which would accelerate their returns if plans worked out. But things didn’t go according to plans. Instead, the companies have faced a litany of problems, including bruising contract battles with insurance company UnitedHealth Group Inc. and a costly lobbying fight in Washington over legislation to curb what are known as surprise medical bills, which arise when patients are treated at hospitals in their insurance networks by out-of-network doctors.

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Private Equity Requests for Flexibility may Backfire During Pandemic

Brief: The unprecedented coronavirus crisis may have become a headache for private equity sponsors that have pushed for loose lending terms to finance leveraged buyouts as they saddled their portfolio companies with debt. At the heart of the matter is a provision in credit agreements that allows additional time to deliver audited financial reports. The language may allow businesses to delay reporting a potential covenant breach if one arose. Now, during the global health crisis, the added flexibility is forcing auditors to take a harder look at companies’ financial well-being. Most credit agreements require the delivery of ‘clean’ audited year-end financial statements certified by an independent accountant without doubts regarding a company’s ability to continue operations. According to Moody’s Investors Service, the failure to deliver financial statements that meet this requirement may constitute an event of default.

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The Dirty Secret of Asset Management: It’s Doing… Okay?

Brief: Asset managers that run traditional stock and bond funds suffered far less than many investors in the first quarter. The median revenue at traditional publicly traded asset managers declined 6.7 percent in the first quarter of 2020, according to an analysis by Casey Quirk, the asset management strategy consultant that is part of Deloitte. The Standard & Poor’s 500 stock index fell almost 20 percent in the first quarter as economies around the world shut down in response to the coronavirus. Amid the shutdown, asset managers shelled out less to keep their businesses going. Operating expenses fell 3.9 percent, according to Casey Quirk, which analyzed 19 firms with approximately $16 trillion assets under management. Investors also stayed put. Net flows declined less than 1 percent, with retail investors representing most of the outflows, according to the consultant. Operating margins declined 1.9 percent for the median firm.  With markets rising during 2019 and into early 2020, asset managers had a positive quarter when compared with the year-earlier period. 

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Contact Castle Hall to discuss due diligence

Castle Hall has a range of due diligence solutions to support asset owners and managers as our industry collectively faces unheralded challenges. This is not a time for "gotcha" due diligence - rather this is a time where investors and asset managers can and should work together to share best practices and protect assets. Please contact us if you'd like to discuss any aspect of how Covid-19 may impact your business.

Our briefing for Thursday May 28, 2020:

  • As the death toll in the United States has now passed 100,000, the state hit the hardest is making a bold move when it comes to facial coverings. New York state governor Andrew Cuomo will sign an executive order that will authorize private businesses the right to deny entry to people who don’t wear a mask, or facial covering. “When we are talking about reopening stores in places of business, we are giving the store owners the right to say if you are not wearing a mask, you can't come in. That store owner has the right to protect himself, governor Cuomo said. New York City mayor Bill de Blasio is preparing for the area to begin phase 1 of its reopening in the first or second week of June. 

  • Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau was co-host of a United Nations (UN) meeting that included more than 50 heads of state and governments aimed at lessening the social and economic blow of the coronavirus pandemic. Prime Minister Trudeau co-hosted the meeting with UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres and Jamaican Prime Minister Andrew Holness. Trudeau called on a co-ordinated effort for global and domestic economies to bounce back. Noticeably not one of the 50 heads of state to join the meeting was United States President Donald Trump who has argued smart leaders put the interests of their country first.

  • United Kingdom Prime Minister Boris Johnson announced Thursday that England has met all five of the government’s tests for easing the lockdown. Therefore as of Monday June 1st, groups of six people can meet outdoors, outdoor retail and car showrooms can reopen and primary schools can resume as well. Non-essential retailers will be allowed to reopen starting June 15th with social distancing measures in place.

  • France Prime Minister Edouard Phillippe announced the country will relax travel restrictions inside the country and allow schools, cafes and restaurants to reopen next week. The announcement marks the second stage of France’s easing from their lockdown. The first stage happened on May 11th after a two-month shutdown. The country like many others throughout the world has seen their economy suffer with unemployment claims rising to 22% in April.

  • Philippines President Rodrigo Duterte has approved a recommendation to relax lockdown restrictions in Manila as of June 1st. Gatherings of up to ten people will be allowed, shops and some public transportation will reopen, while movement in and out of the capital city will be permitted. However, provided people wear masks and observe social distancing. The relaxed rules are happening even though the country reported its highest daily infection rate on Thursday. As of this weekend, Manila’s lockdown will surpass Wuhan’s, ground zero for the coronavirus epidemic, in terms of length.

  • South Korea announced on Thursday they will be strengthening quarantine measures in Seoul and surrounding areas after experiencing its largest jump in daily infections in nearly two months. Public facilities such as galleries and parks will be closed for two weeks while the country’s health minister has urged entertainment venues to suspend operations as well.

Covid-19 – Due Diligence And Asset Management

Finance CEO’s Worry Markets are too Optimistic About Economy

Brief: Leaders of the biggest financial companies are getting more optimistic about an economic rebound as the pandemic lockdown eases, but say recent stock gains might have overshot reality. “The market is assuming that we’re not going to see a severe second wave or third wave” of Covid-19, and that treatments will become available to cushion the impact of new outbreaks, BlackRock Inc. Chief Executive Officer Larry Fink said Wednesday at a virtual industry conference. “I do believe jobs are going to be slower coming back than other people believe.” Stock-market optimism was particularly pronounced this week, with some of the best performers, including Carnival Corp. and United Airlines Holdings Inc., among those hurt most by the pandemic. The S&P 500 has increased 36% since reaching its lowest in almost 3 1/2 years on March 23. Signs that economies are starting to come to life and prospects for a vaccine helped fuel the gains, as did upbeat comments from policy makers and business leaders. JPMorgan Chase & Co. CEO Jamie Dimon said some borrowers who requested forbearance are still making payments, and banks could be done adding to loan-loss reserves after this quarter.

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Hedge Funds Seek Distressed Debt Mavens Amid Pandemic Turmoil

Brief: First came the money. Now it’s the manpower. Hedge funds and investment firms are scouting for distressed debt specialists as they raise large war chests to snap up bargains amid the downturn triggered by the coronavirus pandemic. Elliott Management Corp., Signal Capital Partners and Taconic Capital Advisors have all embarked on a hiring spree in recent weeks, while headhunters Paragon Search Partners are juggling requests for distressed debt hires. “There’s so much money being raised, it requires more people on the ground,” said Louisa Watt, a lawyer who advises distressed debt funds as a partner at Brown Rudnick LLP. This is the busiest her clients have been in years, she added. One of the hedge funds she works with has done more trades in the last six weeks than they did in the last two years combined. Firms including Oaktree Capital Group LLC, Highbridge Capital Management and Chenavari Investment Managers are seeking to raise a record $68 billion to target companies that have been punished by the global economic shutdown, according to data compiled by Preqin.

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Property Fund Income Seen Plunging 35% and Value Slump May Last Beyond Crisis

Brief: Investors relying on commercial property funds could lose up to 35% of their income as rents dry up during the pandemic, and experts warn them to "brace themselves" for a looming crash in values even if the market bounces back. Asset managers running some of the UK’s largest commercial property funds are beginning to warn their clients to expect lower payouts as the virus hammers the industry. According to a Legal & General investor note, sent on 22 May and seen by Financial News, the firm’s £2.8bn UK property fund has collected 76% of the rent required by the end of March. L&G said that it collected 88% of required rent from offices, 81% from industrials, 76% from alternatives, 61% from retail, and 15% from leisure. L&G's rental collection from offices is holding up so far, but there might be fewer firms looking to rent space due to the success of swathes of employees working from home. Analysis from occupier consultancy DeVono Cresa found that demand for commercial property had dipped by 30% in the first quarter of 2020.

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Home Trading Triggers Bank ‘Black Hole’ Surveillance Alerts

Brief: Potential breaches of market rules have spiked since traders began working from home in March, drawing scrutiny from regulators and piling pressure on banks to plug “black holes” in surveillance systems, industry officials say. With banks unable to check in person on the behaviour of traders working remotely, they have to rely on machines that flag any apparent bad behaviour or suspicious transactions made under the unusual coronavirus crisis working conditions. “In your kitchen or spare bedroom there is no colleague to monitor what you are up to and what we are seeing across a number of clients is a spike in escalations,” said Erkin Adylov, CEO of Behavox, whose software is used by banks, hedge funds and asset managers in New York, London and Asia to monitor staff. Behavox has seen an 18% rise in conduct being “escalated” or singled out for scrutiny among clients since March, ranging from swearing to more serious incidents like disclosing client names.

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Canada’s Big Banks Set Aside $7.9 Billion for Soured Loans

Brief: Toronto-Dominion Bank and Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce set aside record amounts for soured loans in the fiscal second quarter, bringing total provisions for Canada’s six-biggest banks to C$10.9 billion ($7.9 billion) as they brace for the coronavirus pandemic’s economic aftermath. Toronto-Dominion reported the biggest set-asides among the country’s large lenders, earmarking C$3.22 billion, while CIBC’s figure was C$1.41 billion. The higher provisions for credit losses eroded net income in the three months through April, with both companies missing analysts’ earnings estimates. The Canadian banks, like their U.S. counterparts, are building up reserves in anticipation of expected stresses to consumers and companies from the outbreak, which brought the North American economy to a virtual standstill and boosted unemployment on both sides of the border. Loan-loss provisions topped analysts’ expectations of C$8.9 billion for Canada’s six biggest banks.

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Private Equity in the Covid-19 Crisis

Brief: While the impact of the coronavirus pandemic on global stock markets is clear to see, it's harder to discern its effect on private equity markets. Investors in unlisted companies don't have the option to buys and sell shares at a moment's notice as they do with businesses listed on the stock market, but that doesn't mean these firms can't see their valuations plunge during a crisis. Private equity is typically viewed as a risky area of investment. Lack of liquidity is a prime concern as it can take a long time to offload an investment, and fledgling businesses are often prone to failure. Concerns around the risk of the sector were raised last year during the high-profilecollapse of the Woodford Patient Capital Trust, which was taken over and renamed by Schrodersafter embattled investor Neil Woodford closed his eponymous fund firm. Investment trusts have been caught up in the market turmoil of recent months and private equity trusts have not come out unscathed; Morningstar Direct data shows the average Private Equity investment trust is down 20.1% year to date. That compares with the FTSE 100, which is still down 20% year to date, and the S&P 500, down 13%. Just one of the 14 trusts in the sector, BMO Private Equity Trust (BPET), is in positive territory, with its share price up 2.42% year to date. Its peers, meanwhile, have seen their share prices tumble by as much as 49%. 

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Contact Castle Hall to discuss due diligence

Castle Hall has a range of due diligence solutions to support asset owners and managers as our industry collectively faces unheralded challenges. This is not a time for "gotcha" due diligence - rather this is a time where investors and asset managers can and should work together to share best practices and protect assets. Please contact us if you'd like to discuss any aspect of how Covid-19 may impact your business.

Our briefing for Wednesday May 27, 2020:

  • In the United States, Dr. Anthony Fauci, the nation’s top infectious disease expert and a member of the White House coronavirus task force, has called on Americans to wear face masks when out in public. Dr. Fauci said while the use of a mask is not 100% effective, it is a valuable safeguard and shows respect for one another if each person is wearing a mask. However, even something as small as a mask can stoke political fires within the United States as President Donald Trump refuses to wear one in public and criticized his November presidential opponent, Joe Biden for wearing one during a Memorial Day service.

  • The fallout from the military’s report on the state of long-term care homes in Canada’s two largest provinces continues. The Quebec government made the military’s report public on Wednesday, after receiving it the day before. The report provides an account on the 25 long-term care homes where members of the military were asked to assist during the pandemic. In many cases the report described of how staffing and equipment were inadequate when they arrived, but has since improved. While not overly encouraging, the report didn’t seem to be as dire as those outlined in the five cases in Ontario on Tuesday. More than 60% of the COVID-19 related deaths in Quebec have occurred in long-term care homes.

  • The United Kingdom launched its test and trace system on Wednesday. The National Health Service programme is designed to identify and isolate those infected with the coronavirus. Those infected will share their recent contact information and anyone identified as a contact will be expected to stay home for 14 days, even if they feel well to stop the virus from spreading. Along with the test and trace system, Prime Minister Boris Johnson said it was the government’s ambition to ensure coronavirus tests are returned within 24 hours. However, Prime Minister Johnson would not commit to a timeline, other than noting ,“It’s going to be as soon as possible.”

  • France, Italy and Belgium have halted the use of hydroxychloroquine to treat patients suffering from COVID-19. The move comes after the World Health Organization decided to pause a large trial on the drug due to safety concerns earlier in the week.

  • The European Commission has called for the power to borrow €750 billion to help bankroll recovery efforts from the coronavirus. European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen wants a transformation of the European Union’s central finances that will allow them to raise large capital, which then can be redistributed to hard-hit member states.

  • According to a media report, the German government wants to end a travel warning for tourist trips to 31 European countries from June 15th. Elsewhere in the country Chancellor Angela Merkel will concede more power to its 16 states as they continue to fight the coronavirus pandemic. Chancellor Merkel has insisted on social distancing and mask wearing as vital to avoid a new wave of infections as states that have seen a low amount of cases want to move away from stricter rules.

  • A plan for a travel bubble between Australia and New Zealand could be presented to both governments as early as next week. The travel bubble could be operational by September as Australians are the largest national cohort visiting New Zealand, accounting for 40% of foreign arrivals and Australia is the most popular destination for New Zealanders travelling overseas.

Covid-19 – Due Diligence And Asset Management

Pompeo Certifies Hong Kong is no Longer Autonomous From China, Jeopardizing Billions of Dollars in Trade

Brief: Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said he certified to Congress Wednesday that Hong Kongno longer enjoys a high degree of autonomy from China -- a decision that could result in the loss of Hong Kong's special trading status with the US and threaten the autonomous region's standing as an international financial hub… His decision comes after Beijing introduced controversialnational security legislationfor Hong Kong -- legislation that Pompeo again denounced in Wednesday's statement as a "disastrous decision." Last week, the top US diplomat warned that the passage of the legislation would be a "death knell" for Hong Kong's autonomy. The proposed law hasprompted protestsin Hong Kong and has been denounced internationally, with observers warning it could curtail many of the fundamental political freedoms and civil liberties guaranteed in the agreement handing the city over from British to Chinese rule in 1997.

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Australian Investment to Stay at Home After Pandemic, IFM Says

Brief:One of Australia’s largest investment firms expects to see more demand for assets in its home market in the coming year as the coronavirus pandemic slows the recent wave of money flowing out of the country. IFM Investors Pty., a A$156 billion fund ($104 billion) owned by 27 of Australia’s largest not-for-profit retirement firms, is seeing appetite among its clients for local infrastructure projects, Chief Executive Officer David Neal said. The firm is considering raising new capital to lend to struggling companies and will consider being a cornerstone investor in future capital raisings by Australian-listed companies… Favoring local assets would mark a shift in strategy for the nation’s A$2.7 trillion pension pool -- the world’s fourth largest -- that’s been sending more money offshore in recent years as it outgrew the local market and investment opportunities dried up. It’s an opportune time as the government weighs new spending, with the economy on the brink of its first recession in almost 30 years.

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BlackRock CEO Says It’s Still Worth Betting On Global Equities

Brief: BlackRock Inc. Chief Executive Officer Larry Fink said it’s still worth betting on equities in the long run even though the coronavirus convulsed global stock markets this year and troubles may still lie ahead. “Even today, a strong ownership in the new economies over long horizons is going to be a great asset class,” Fink said on a Deutsche Bank AG webcast on Wednesday. “The only asset class over a long horizon that you can rest assured, over long horizons, that you’re going to be safe, will be global equities.” That doesn’t mean the near-term picture looks rosy. Fink’s remarks come weeks after he delivered a grim message on a private call with clients of a wealth advisory firm. Bankers he’s spoken to expect the coronavirus pandemic will hit American companies hard, with cascades of bankruptcies to follow, Bloomberg News reported at the time. Fink, whose firm is the world’s biggest asset manager, acknowledged Wednesday that near-term pain probably lies ahead.

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Goldman is Bringing Traders Back to Offices in New York and London in the ‘Next Several Weeks’

Brief: Wall Street is heading back to work. Goldman Sachs is planning on having some of its traders and other markets personnel return to offices in the U.S. and London in the next few weeks, executive John Waldron said Wednesday in an investor conference. “We are beginning the process of returning to our offices around the world,” said Waldron, who is Goldman’s president and chief operating officer. “We are planning for a core group of people in our markets-facing businesses to return in the US and London over the next several weeks.” Goldman, a top player in global trading and capital markets businesses, sent New York-area employees home in March as lockdowns began in the U.S. The bank’s Wall Street-centric businesses performed well in the first quarter, exceeding analysts’ expectations amid record volatility. Now, some of the 98% of bank employees working from home will begin to return to the bank’s offices in Manhattan, New Jersey and Connecticut.

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Frozen UK Property Funds Face Existential Crisis

Brief: British property funds are set to remain frozen for months as the market is impossible to value due to the coronavirus crisis, and some may need to change structure to survive, industry sources say. Ten big open-ended property funds tracked by Morningstar, with a total of 6.5 billion pounds ($8 billion) under management, stopped investors from getting their money out in mid March, saying valuers could not accurately assess real estate assets in a plunging economy.With question marks over the future of office working, the retail industry in crisis and the housing market only just reopening, the price of property is set for a major readjustment, but a dearth of transactions means the scale of change is still unclear.“This is a crisis unlike any other,” said Ben Sanderson, a director at Hermes Real Estate Investment Management. “In the short term, it’s going to be hugely challenging.”

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The II Fear Index: Investors Want the Fed’s Support, Even if it Increases Credit Risk

Brief: Nearly three-quarters of investment professionals believe the U.S. Federal Reserve’s corporate credit buying programs have stabilized markets since their lows in March. But this week’s II Fear Index reveals investors are also worried about new risk introduced by the initiatives — including a dangerous assumption of credit risk by the public. For six weeks, Institutional Investor has been polling investment professionals about everything from government initiatives to the rationality of equity investors for the weekly II Fear Index. This week’s survey had 168 respondents, the highest yet for the poll. About 74 percent of the surveyed investment professionals said the move by the Fed to purchase corporate bond ETFs, a first for the central bank, provides necessary liquidity to credit markets. But 70 percent said the Fed’s ETF buying also “raises concern about careless risk taking.” Sixty-seven percent of respondents said the initiative “unreasonably encouraged shifting credit risks from the private sector to the public sector.”

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Contact Castle Hall to discuss due diligence

Castle Hall has a range of due diligence solutions to support asset owners and managers as our industry collectively faces unheralded challenges. This is not a time for "gotcha" due diligence - rather this is a time where investors and asset managers can and should work together to share best practices and protect assets. Please contact us if you'd like to discuss any aspect of how Covid-19 may impact your business.